cawacko
Well-known member
The impetus for this post is NiftyNiblick's comment that centrist are fence sitters who need to take a side (and he is far from the only person who holds this view).
To me that implies you state you are a Democrat or Republican and its fvcking ride or die with your party. Trump got crap for his metaphor 'I could shoot someone on Fifth Ave and people would still support me' but he (sadly) should be credited for how raw and accurate it is. Many people feel that way about their political party.
I think that attitude manifests itself in the way we have political debate. A large majority of partisans tend to focus on the other party and all its (perceived or real) wrongs. We talk far less about our party and when we do talk about our own party, it's rare that its in a challenging or negative way. It's like the old black adage 'don't air our dirty laundry in front of white people'. Same for partisans, never say anything negative about our own party when someone else from the other party may be able to hear.
And because of the ride or die attitudes people buy into the hype that we can only have two parties and you must only support one or the other, and therefore nothing changes even though polling show people want change (either more or different options).
I'm going to be a hypocrite here because I'm not really a big fan of the 'learn to think for yourself' line because it often simply means 'anything who thinks for themselves would share my views and vote the way I do' but I do think simply believing everything a political party does because we are supposed to pick a side lends itself to a lack of thinking. It's too easy. One can have diverse viewpoints even if people dismissively try to label them a 'mushy middle'.
To me that implies you state you are a Democrat or Republican and its fvcking ride or die with your party. Trump got crap for his metaphor 'I could shoot someone on Fifth Ave and people would still support me' but he (sadly) should be credited for how raw and accurate it is. Many people feel that way about their political party.
I think that attitude manifests itself in the way we have political debate. A large majority of partisans tend to focus on the other party and all its (perceived or real) wrongs. We talk far less about our party and when we do talk about our own party, it's rare that its in a challenging or negative way. It's like the old black adage 'don't air our dirty laundry in front of white people'. Same for partisans, never say anything negative about our own party when someone else from the other party may be able to hear.
And because of the ride or die attitudes people buy into the hype that we can only have two parties and you must only support one or the other, and therefore nothing changes even though polling show people want change (either more or different options).
I'm going to be a hypocrite here because I'm not really a big fan of the 'learn to think for yourself' line because it often simply means 'anything who thinks for themselves would share my views and vote the way I do' but I do think simply believing everything a political party does because we are supposed to pick a side lends itself to a lack of thinking. It's too easy. One can have diverse viewpoints even if people dismissively try to label them a 'mushy middle'.
